It appears that a good doctor has been dismissed for emailing a well known prayer. There is background: Dr Drew was a whistleblower.

I think the hospital authorities deserve a good kicking.

Dr Drew, a father of four who lives with his wife Janet, 61, in Sutton Coldfield, West Mids, said he was pushed to accept that he had behaved inappropriately and was even offered a “financial inducement” to go quietly.He was first excluded in April 2009, after sending the prayer, and was eventually dismissed three days before Christmas in 2010. He lost an appeal last April.Ian McKivett, Dr Drew's representative from the British Medical Association, told the tribunal that his client had repeatedly asked the Walsall Healthcare NHS Trust for examples of alleged inappropriate religious references but that they could only point to the prayer.

This has little to do with his religion and a lot more to do with him being seen as uncooperative and insubordinate by his co-workers and superiors, he was not dismissed for emailing a prayer, he was asked after (might have been before, that isn't clear) he sent the prayer to refrain from sending religious messages to his co-workers which is a perfectly reasonable request and he flat out refused which quite rightly is being used as evidence.

This has little to do with his religion and a lot more to do with him being seen as uncooperative and insubordinate by his co-workers and superiors, he was not dismissed for emailing a prayer, he was asked after (might have been before, that isn't clear) he sent the prayer to refrain from sending religious messages to his co-workers which is a perfectly reasonable request and he flat out refused which quite rightly is being used as evidence.

Of course I only know what the papers say, however, I would not class The Secular Society as neutral. I quote " "It was about the verbosity and length of his e-mails. He deconstructed every sentence and sent it to so many people."